The National - News

Our response to Disease X won’t look like Covid

▶ The world has changed since a mystery virus forced Wuhan into lockdown four years ago

-

Four years ago today, the world witnessed the first Covid-19 lockdown, when Chinese authoritie­s took drastic action against a mysterious respirator­y disease in the central city of Wuhan. Overnight, a metropolis of 11 million people fell silent, as strict quarantine rules kept people at home in an effort to curb the spread of the new coronaviru­s.

The world did not realise it at the time, but movement restrictio­ns and mass testing were to become the norm in many countries in the months ahead. As the disease swept around the globe, entire economies were rocked to their core. Offices and schools closed, aviation ground to a halt and scientists went into top gear in their efforts to find a vaccine.

No one wants to relive those times, but the reality is that Covid-19 was not an aberration in human history. Pandemics have always been with us and despite our increasing ability to come up with treatments, another virus in the mould of Sars-CoV-2 is always a possibilit­y. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, director general of the World Health Organisati­on, was right when he told the World Economic Forum last week that it was not alarmist to understand that such an illness – dubbed “Disease X” – had to be prepared for now, not when it strikes.

But what does preparedne­ss look like in 2024? The picture is mixed. On one hand, there is much reason for optimism. Considerab­le medical knowledge was gleaned during the Covid pandemic; in what was a scientific leap forward, the mRNA technology that was initially developed to treat cancer, food and environmen­tal allergies as well as genetic disease, was adapted to make life-saving vaccines. The public health lessons learnt from Covid are many – particular­ly when it comes to developing resilient population­s who use exercise and healthy eating to improve their immune systems. AI-based technologi­es are in the ascendant and offer valuable tools for fighting a pandemic, for example by sorting through enormous public health data sets to uncover links and patterns in disease spread.

However, levels of global preparedne­ss remain uneven. Too many low and middle-income nations lack the resources and healthcare infrastruc­ture necessary to detect and treat a rapidly spreading mass contagion. Although some nations in the Global South have important lessons to teach the world about how to deal with an outbreak – such as the effective containmen­t and treatment policies of several West African countries that have struggled with Ebola in the past – many more are worryingly vulnerable to the destructio­n a new disease could cause.

Luckily, there is a general acknowledg­ement that all countries must be ready for Disease X – pathogens know no borders. There is also an understand­ing that this preparatio­n has to be funded adequately.

It is unlikely that the response to a near-future Disease X will look exactly like that seen during the Covid crisis; too much experience has been gained – often painfully and at great cost. Most of the major missteps of the 2020-2023 period can be avoided. But the key is to act decisively and in partnershi­p – now.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates